Water Underground

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Water Underground. How Water Moves Underground. Water underground trickles down between particles of soil and through cracks and spaces in layers of rock. Effects of Different Materials. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Water Underground

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Water Underground

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How Water Moves Underground• Water underground trickles down between

particles of soil and through cracks and spaces in layers of rock

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Effects of Different Materials

• Permeable materials have large and connected pores; materials such as sand and gravel allow water to pass through or permeate.

• Impermeable materials have few or no pores or cracks; therefore the water cannot pass through easily

• Examples: clay and granite

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Water Zones

• **The area of permeable rock or soil that is totally filled or saturated, with water is called the saturated zone**

• **The top of the saturated zone is called the water table**

• The area above the water table is called the unsaturated zone

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Bringing up Groundwater• In some areas, the water table meets the

surface

• Aquifers:– Any underground layer of rock or sediment that

holds water is known as an aquifer**– Size: small underground patch to the size of

several states

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Aquifers continued• Functions: drinking water, water for

crops, and water for livestock

• Rate of Movement: depends on the slope of the aquifer and permeability of rocks

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Wells

• **People can obtain groundwater from an aquifer by drilling a well below the water table**

• If the level of the aquifer drops, a well can run dry

• The water table can rise after heavy rain or snow melts

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Using Pumps• Mechanical pumps bring up groundwater

• If water is pumped out too fast, a well will run dry

• New water that enters the aquifer from the surface is called recharge

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Relying on Pressure• **In an artesian well, water rises because

of pressure in an aquifer**

• If groundwater becomes trapped between two layers of impermeable rock or sediment, the pressure sends water spurting up through the punctured hole

• No pump is necessary

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Springs and Geysers• Sometimes, groundwater comes to the

surface through natural processes

• When groundwater bubbles or flows out of cracks in the rock it is called a spring

• A fountain of boiling water is known as a geyser

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Springs and Geysers

• The word geyser means gusher

• A geyser forms when very hot water that has been circulating deep underground begins to rise through narrow passages in the rock

• Provide one example of a geyser: Old Faithful

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Interesting Sites• http://unmuseum.mus.pa.us/flash/geyflash.htm

• http://www.nps.gov/archive/yell/oldfaithfulcam.htm

• http://www.floridasprings.org • www.unitedstreaming.com (Gushing Geysers; Natural Phenomena)

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• Which wells end in a saturated zone?• Which well(s) will not provide water? • How does water enter Aquifer A?

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